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The GB champions going from Olympic gold to battling the boos
Boxing can turn the bright-eyed and bushy-tailed into the cynical and contorted, seemingly overnight.
Look into their jaundiced eyes, listen to their weary words and you enter a world of crossed-out, ripped-up, stomped-upon storylines.
So sup up the youthful vigour of Great Britain's glorious Olympians Anthony Joshua and Luke Campbell while you can. Because the flavour might run out before long.
"You get back from an Olympics and you're hot property," says James DeGale, who won gold for Britain at the 2008 Games in Beijing.
"I'd done my country proud, I signed for the biggest promoter in Europe in Frank Warren. But after my first professional fight, when I got booed, I thought to myself: 'Right, this ain't all glitz and glamour. That stuff fades, this is some serious stuff.'"
On Saturday, DeGale fights Dyah Davis at the Bluewater shopping centre in Kent. Vegas it isn't. Almost five years, 17 fights and plenty of lumps and bumps into his professional career, the promised land still seems a long way off.
"I definitely thought I'd have fought for a world title by now," adds the 27-year-old, who at least has terrestrial television exposure on Channel 5
"But with politics and problems with promoters [DeGale left Warren for Mick Hennessy last September], things slowed down a touch. Pro boxing's not just a sport, it's a business - the hardest business in the world."
No British Olympic boxing champion has won a professional world title. Chris Finnegan, who struck gold in 1968, came closest, losing in valiant fashion to American light-heavyweight great Bob Foster in 1972.
Sydney 2000 champion Audley Harrison entered the pro ranks believing the medal dangling from his neck doubled as an amulet but soon discovered that gold grows old, like any other colour.
Errol Christie never competed at an Olympics but he was one of Britain's finest amateur talents, our very own Sugar Ray Leonard. But three years into his paid career he was all but washed up and never fought for a pro title. "Christie's heart," it was written, "sets questions his chin can't answer."
Frankie Gavin was billed as a modern-day Christie - only better. Balletic foot movement, exquisite balance, the kid from Birmingham had pretty much everything. And still does, it's just that he momentarily lost it along the way.
"In the end it was so easy for me as an amateur," says Gavin, who missed out on the 2008 Olympics after failing to make the weight but remains the only British boxer to win a world amateur title.
"I won my last 50 fights, everything was done for me at GB Boxing in Sheffield and when you're part of a team you can help each other. But when you turn pro you're on your own. I didn't realise how lonely it would be."
An unhappy boxer tends to be an underperforming boxer and loneliness exacerbated by personal turmoil made Gavin a very unhappy boxer indeed.
"I took my family up to Manchester and it was alright for a bit," says the 28-year-old. "But when I split up from my girlfriend I was doing it all on my own. And I was even lonelier."
Besides his relationship ending in acrimonious circumstances, Gavin's grandmother died and his mother was diagnosed with cancer. In addition, Gavin felt unloved by some of those charged with guiding his career.
"I remember almost falling over in front of one trainer," says Gavin, "and he said: 'I'm glad you didn't go over, that might have been my investment gone, my 10%.' It made me think.
"I was on the brink of giving it all up. I said to Frank Warren: 'I'll get back in touch if I want to box again.'"
Sitting next to Gavin, with his eyes wide open and his ears cocked, is his old team-mate Anthony Ogogo, a bronze medallist at the London Olympics.
Ogogo, on the books of American giants Golden Boy Promotions, is three fights into his pro career and as bushy-tailed as boxers come. But even he is becoming pitted by the game's hard truths.
"I've never seen anyone as talented as Frankie," says the 24-year-old. "So it's weird to think it could have been all over almost before it started.
"Then again, you hear so many horror stories in boxing - strife with promoters, trainers or managers. It's a hard enough game without all that so you need to know you've got the right people around you. People you can trust."
Boxers are wont to blame everyone but themselves for their lack of progress. So it is refreshing to hear Gavin admitting his own mistakes and that he has taken steps to rectify them. Starting with getting the right people around him. People he can trust.
"I got complacent because it all seemed too easy again, starting out in the pro ranks," says Gavin. "I thought all I had to do was box - pads, spar, pads, spar. But you've got to work on your weaknesses as well as your strengths.
"Fighters I should have been smashing up I was having hard fights against, like Curtis Woodhouse. But when I went back to Birmingham my old amateur trainer, Tom Chaney, took over again.
"He's like a father figure to me. He doesn't nag me for money if I don't get paid on time - he's not in it for money, he's in it for me."
Head settled and body a temple once more, Gavin is now the British and Commonwealth welterweight champion and confident enough to be calling out Kell Brook and Amir Khan.
DeGale, too, is "older and wiser". Free of hangers-on, less bombastic but painfully aware he remains lumbered with something of an image problem.
"I learned a whole heap from my loss against George Groves," says DeGale of his only pro defeat, by his bitter domestic rival in 2011.
"During the build-up I was a bit too vocal, telling him he was ugly and his breath smelt. Maybe I shouldn't have said that.
"I read and hear people saying I'm flash and cocky and it does hurt a bit. Maybe it's just me being me. But the people who know me realise I'm a genuine, humble, down-to-earth boy."
Ogogo may have his eyes wide open and both ears cocked - "James and Frankie have made mistakes I don't want to make". But the chain of advice is unbroken from the time men first laced up gloves and the same mistakes are made. Over and over again.
Proof that professional boxing isn't a sport, it isn't a business, it's a series of accidents - rather than mistakes - just waiting to happen.
"I get a lot of stick," says DeGale, a former British and European super-middleweight champion and one or two fights away from a world title shot.
"People telling me I'm greedy, that I'm always thinking about money, that I've messed up my career. But they don't understand. I love boxing, but it's hard, it's a short career and I want to get paid as much as I can and get out with my faculties intact.
"I tell young fighters who train with me: 'Get in there, make some money and run.'" Which almost never happens. Not even if you turn up for your first day of work with a medal round your neck.
"It's always there," says DeGale, "I'm always 'James Degale, Olympic champion'. But another Olympics comes around, new medallists arrive and they start taking the limelight." Leaving the old guard cynical and contorted, seemingly overnight.
What Great Britain's Olympic champions did next
•Terry Spinks (flyweight, 1956): British featherweight champion; 41 wins, seven defeats, one draw
•Dick McTaggart (lightweight, 1956): Stayed amateur, won bronze in 1960
•Chris Finnegan (middleweight, 1968): British, European & Commonwealth light-heavyweight champion, world title challenger; 29 wins, seven defeats, one draw
•Audley Harrison (super-heavyweight, 2000): European heavyweight champion, world title challenger; 31 wins, seven defeats
•James DeGale (middleweight, 2008): British & European middleweight champion; 16 wins, one defeat
•Luke Campbell (bantamweight, 2012): Three wins, no defeats
•Anthony Joshua (super-heavyweight, 2012): Two wins, no defeats
GPB have offered Cotto $10m to fight Canelo in March. I think it's a fight Cotto should seriously consider. Lets face he won't be offered that kind of money too often. I wonder if Top Rank will counter that.
Mike Tyson: I used fake willie to fool drug-testers and fought on cocaine
12 Nov 2013 19:24
Former world heavyweight boxing champion makes amazing claims about his career in new book Undisputed Truth
Mike Tyson claims he fought while high on drugs and used a fake penis to fool dope testers.
“I was a full-blown cokehead,” says Tyson in his autobiography, ‘The Undisputed Truth’.
Former world heavyweight king Tyson claims he spent a large chunk of his career addicted to cocaine and marijuana.
Tyson, 47, admits taking drugs before his shock loss to Londoner Danny Williams in Louisville in July 2004 in his memoir published yesterday.
He claims he first tried cocaine aged just 11 and wrote: “The history of war is the history of drugs. Every great general and warrior from the beginning of time was high.”
The New Yorker, who retired in 2005, also admits devising a fake penis, or his ‘whizzer’ as he called it, to avoid failing drugs tests.
Tyson says he came up with the idea before his fight against Lou Savarese at Hampden Park in June 2000 and one of his team would bring it to each contest.
He admits he had taken ‘blow’ and ‘pot’ before the bout and filled his ‘whizzer’ with someone else’s urine to dupe the testers.
“I was a full-blown cokehead,” says Tyson in his autobiography, ‘The Undisputed Truth’.
Former world heavyweight king Tyson claims he spent a large chunk of his career addicted to cocaine and marijuana.
Tyson, 47, admits taking drugs before his shock loss to Londoner Danny Williams in Louisville in July 2004 in his memoir published yesterday.
He claims he first tried cocaine aged just 11 and wrote: “The history of war is the history of drugs. Every great general and warrior from the beginning of time was high.”
The New Yorker, who retired in 2005, also admits devising a fake penis, or his ‘whizzer’ as he called it, to avoid failing drugs tests.
Tyson says he came up with the idea before his fight against Lou Savarese at Hampden Park in June 2000 and one of his team would bring it to each contest.
He admits he had taken ‘blow’ and ‘pot’ before the bout and filled his ‘whizzer’ with someone else’s urine to dupe the testers.
That same year, Tyson tested positive for marijuana and was fined $200,000.
He blames that failure on being tested before his whizzer caddy - the member of his entourage who carried the fake todger - could hand it over to him.
Tyson also claims he had taken cocaine before his press conference brawl with Lennox Lewis in New York in January 2002 when he bit the Brit on the leg.
“I lost my mind,” said Tyson. “I looked over at him and wanted to hit the motherf*****”.
When he faced Frank Bruno for the first time in February 1989 in Las Vegas, he claims he was in such bad condition that Bruno “should have kicked my ass”. Tyson won inside five rounds.
The two met again in 1996, when Bruno was world champion, and Tyson - who won in the third round - claims the Englishman "smelled of fear."
Tyson, the youngest boxer ever to win the WBC, WBA and IBF heavyweight titles, has retired from boxing and been through years of rehab.
Bruno might as well have shat all down his leg it was that obvious that he was utterly terrified. Not having a go at him - I would've been stood there crying
Thanks very much for being ‘This Mornings’ Farmer’
Bruno might as well have shat all down his leg it was that obvious that he was utterly terrified. Not having a go at him - I would've been stood there crying
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